2021-08-30T12:05:19Z
2021-08-30T12:05:19Z
2021-01-26
2021-08-30T12:05:19Z
Systems composed of reactive particles diffusing in a network display emergent dynamics. While Fick's diffusion can lead to Turing patterns, other diffusion schemes might display more complex phenomena. Here we study the death and restoration of collective oscillations in networks of oscillators coupled by random-walk diffusion, which modifies both the original unstable fixed point and the stable limit-cycle, making them topology-dependent. By means of numerical simulations we show that, in some cases, the diffusion-induced heterogeneity stabilizes the initially unstable fixed point via a Hopf bifurcation. Further increasing the coupling strength can moreover restore the oscillations. A numerical stability analysis indicates that this phenomenology corresponds to a case of amplitude death, where the inhomogeneous stabilized solution arises from the interplay of random walk diffusion and heterogeneous topology. Our results are relevant in the fields of epidemic spreading or ecological dispersion, where random walk diffusion is more prevalent.
Article
Published version
English
Rutes aleatòries (Matemàtica); Xarxes (Matemàtica); Random walks (Mathematics); Nets (Mathematics)
Springer Nature
Reproducció del document publicat a: https://doi.org/10.1038/s42005-020-00516-w
Communications Physics, 2021, vol. 4, num. 13, p. 1-11
https://doi.org/10.1038/s42005-020-00516-w
cc-by (c) Clusella, Pau et al., 2021
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/